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(18) DURING and WHILE


During  (1) is used to indicate “throughout the entire period”;
                   Example: We are not allowed to smoke during office hours.




              (2) is used to show “a point of time in the entire period”.
                   Example: He quit home during the semester.




While – (1) is used when an action is continuing;
                 Example: He called while I was watching television.




            (2) is used when two things are happening at the same time;
                 Example: Mother was cooking while I was reading.




            (3) is used to make comparison.
                 Example: Most of the people live in the west coast while the east coast is sparselypopulated.




Differences between ‘During’ and ‘While’.


(1) During’ is a preposition.
           While’ is a conjunction.




(2) During’ usually starts a phrase which does not contain a verb.




Example: During the game, I scored a goal.
Example: During the morning, it started to rain.




While’ is usually followed by a clause which contains a verb.




Example: While I was walking to school, it started to rain.




(3) During’ – the normal patterns are:




During + an event (e.g. the game, war, race, our travels, etc.) + comma + a subject and verb (e.g. I scored a goal)
During + time (e.g. the morning, day, etc.) + comma + action + a subject and verb (e.g. it started to rain)




While’ – the normal pattern is:




While + a subject and verb (e.g. I was walking to school) + comma + a subject and verb (it started to rain).

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